“I don’t fight names. I fight opponents. I fight whoever is in front of me to get through him. So to me, right now, the name Canelo doesn’t mean anything,” said Angulo, 30, who is promoted by Golden Boy.

“Right now, I have another opponent, so that’s who I fight. That’s the next one in front of me. It’s up to my promoter, and it’s up to my trainer who they put in front of me, and I’m ready to fight.”

Angulo (21-2, 18 knockouts) will return to the ring for Saturday night’s clash Mexico’s Jorge Silva (19-2-2, 15 KOs) as part of a Showtime-televised triple-header at the Los Angeles Sport Arena.

Against Silva, Angulo will be in his second fight under reigning Trainer of the Year Virgil Hunter, who is also working with Khan.

Hunter is most known for guiding the career of RING, WBA, WBC and Showtime Super Six World Super Middleweight Boxing Classic Champion Andre Ward, a 2004 Olympic gold medalist who was named Fighter of The Year for 2011.

In victory over Silva, Angulo might look to capture one of the division’s four major titles.

“I don’t care about the name or the belt — WBA, WBC,” said Angulo. “Whoever the opponent is, that would be a great opportunity for me.”

While the 22-year-old Alvarez (41-0-1, 30 KOs) is the beltholder with the marquee name, the 27-year-old Trout (26-0, 14 KOs) is coming off a unanimous decision over four-time, three-division titlewinner Miguel Cotto on Dec. 1 at New York’s Madison Square Garden, where Cotto was 7-0 with four stoppage wins.

Although Bundrage (32-4, 19 KOs) is 39, he owns a fifth-round knockout victory over Baysangurov (28-1, 20 KOs), a 27-year-old winner of nine straight fights, six of them by stoppage, since falling to Bundrage in December of 2008.

“I’m ready for the title fight right now. I’m working now. The decision is up to my trainer Virgil Hunter and Golden Boy,” said Angulo. “I’d be ready to fight for the belt tomorrow. I don’t care who the champions are now. I’m ready. I’m working very hard.”

Angulo admitted that an all-Mexican clash with Alvarez would be huge, referencing the trilogy between four-division title-winner Erik Morales and three-division champ Marco Antonio Barrera.

“Every fight when two fighters are Mexican, it’s a really good fight. [Alvarez] has a lot of heart,” said Angulo. “When you fight another Mexican, you’re talking about fights like Barrera and Morales. Those were good fights. Fighting another Mexican like [Alvarez] would be great.”